A Driving-Gear Dynamic Analysis

2018 ◽  
Vol 931 ◽  
pp. 422-427
Author(s):  
Yevgeniy M. Kudryavtsev

A new approach of mechanical driving-gear dynamic analysis, which includes several modelling stages is observed in the article. On the first stage driving-gear is represented in the form of consistently connected rotation bodies. The driving-gear is represented in a graphic kind by means of the marked graph. On the second stage mathematical model of driving-gear performance with using of mnemonic rule is created. Mathematical model of mechanical driving-gear is a system of second-order regular differential equations (RDEs). The system of second-order regular differential equations is transformed into a system of first-order regular differential equations. There is a standard method for writing a higher-order RDE as a system of the first-order RDEs. On the third stage computer model of driving-gear performance using system Mathcad is created and initial data is defined. On the fourth stage the mechanical driving-gear modelling is performed and calculation data in numerical and graphical forms is obtained. This approach provides high level of the driving-gear dynamic analysis, including the received results presentation, which is especially important on the earliest stages of mechanical driving-gear design. The proposed procedure of mechanical driving-gear dynamic analysis using Mathcad software significantly decreases time and working costs on execution of such computations and helps to execute investigations related with changing of driving-gear elements parameters efficiently.

Author(s):  
Najma Ahmed ◽  
Dumitru Vieru ◽  
Fiazud Din Zaman

A generalized mathematical model of the breast and ovarian cancer is developed by considering the fractional differential equations with Caputo time-fractional derivatives. The use of the fractional model shows that the time-evolution of the proliferating cell mass, the quiescent cell mass, and the proliferative function are significantly influenced by their history. Even if the classical model, based on the derivative of integer order has been studied in many papers, its analytical solutions are presented in order to make the comparison between the classical model and the fractional model. Using the finite difference method, numerical schemes to the Caputo derivative operator and Riemann-Liouville fractional integral operator are obtained. Numerical solutions to the fractional differential equations of the generalized mathematical model are determined for the chemotherapy scheme based on the function of "on-off" type. Numerical results, obtained with the Mathcad software, are discussed and presented in graphical illustrations. The presence of the fractional order of the time-derivative as a parameter of solutions gives important information regarding the proliferative function, therefore, could give the possible rules for more efficient chemotherapy.


2019 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
MUSTAPHA FATEH YAROU

In this paper, we present a new approach to solving second order nonconvex perturbed sweeping process in finite dimensional setting. It consists in a reduction of the problem to a first order one without use of the standard methods of fixed point theory. The perturbation, that is the external force applied on the system is not necessary with bounded values.


2018 ◽  
Vol 28 (14) ◽  
pp. 1850175
Author(s):  
Fangfang Jiang ◽  
Zhicheng Ji ◽  
Yan Wang

In this paper, we investigate the number of limit cycles for two classes of discontinuous Liénard polynomial perturbed differential systems. By the second-order averaging theorem of discontinuous differential equations, we provide several criteria on the lower upper bounds for the maximum number of limit cycles. The results show that the second-order averaging theorem of discontinuous differential equations can predict more limit cycles than the first-order one.


1834 ◽  
Vol 124 ◽  
pp. 247-308 ◽  

The theoretical development of the laws of motion of bodies is a problem of such interest and importance, that it has engaged the attention of all the most eminent mathematicians, since the invention of dynamics as a mathematical science by Galileo, and especially since the wonderful extension which was given to that science by Newton. Among the successors of those illustrious men, Lagrange has perhaps done more than any other analyst, to give extent and harmony to such deductive researches, by showing that the most varied consequences respecting the motions of systems of bodies may be derived from one radical formula; the beauty of the method so suiting the dignity of the results, as to make of his great work a kind of scientific poem. But the science of force, or of power acting by law in space and time, has undergone already another revolution, and has become already more dynamic, by having almost dismissed the conceptions of solidity and cohesion, and those other material ties, or geometrically imaginable conditions, which Lagrange so happily reasoned on, and by tending more and more to resolve all connexions and actions of bodies into attractions and repulsions of points: and while the science is advancing thus in one direction by the improvement of physical views, it may advance in another direction also by the invention of mathematical methods. And the method proposed in the present essay, for the deductive study of the motions of attracting or repelling systems, will perhaps be received with indulgence, as an attempt to assist in carrying forward so high an inquiry. In the methods commonly employed, the determination of the motion of a free point in space, under the influence of accelerating forces, depends on the integration of three equations in ordinary differentials of the second order; and the determination of the motions of a system of free points, attracting or repelling one another, depends on the integration of a system of such equations, in number threefold the number of the attracting or repelling points, unless we previously diminish by unity this latter number, by considering only relative motions. Thus, in the solar system, when we consider only the mutual attractions of the sun and of the ten known planets, the determination of the motions of the latter about the former is reduced, by the usual methods, to the integration of a system of thirty ordinary differential equations of the second order, between the coordinates and the time; or, by a transformation of Lagrange, to the integration of a system of sixty ordinary differential equations of the first order, between the time and the elliptic elements: by which integrations, the thirty varying coordinates, or the sixty varying elements, are to be found as functions of the time. In the method of the present essay, this problem is reduced to the search and differentiation of a single function, which satisfies two partial differential equations of the first order and of the second degree: and every other dynamical problem, respecting the motions of any system, however numerous, of attracting or repelling points, (even if we suppose those points restricted by any conditions of connexion consistent with the law of living force,) is reduced, in like manner, to the study of one central function, of which the form marks out and characterizes the properties of the moving system, and is to be determined by a pair of partial differential equations of the first order, combined with some simple considerations. The difficulty is therefore at least transferred from the integration of many equations of one class to the integration of two of another: and even if it should be thought that no practical facility is gained, yet an intellectual pleasure may result from the reduction of the most complex and, probably., of all researches respecting the forces and motions of body, to the study of one characteristic function, the unfolding of one central relation.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document